Hospitality News
Dilmah Tea will Launch Handpicked Single Source High Anti-oxidant Ice Tea Officially to the Middle East Region in Dubai, Gulfood 2023
Dilmah Tea, the growers, harvesters and brewers of ethical 100% pure Ceylon tea, is proud to launch Singapore’s highest anti-oxidant bottled ice teas, with polyphenols content measuring up to 120 mg per 100 ml.
Launched in partnership with Beverage Partners International (BPI) the range is available in 8 artisanal flavours made with either a green or black tea base, each bottle carries forth founder Merrill J. Fernando’s dedication to tea that is not only good for the palate, people and planet, but also harvested and brewed with ethical practices. Uncompromising quality and taste provide tea lovers with the ultimate tea drinking experience.
Rich Anti-Oxidants in a Bottle
Polyphenols are anti-oxidants encompassing the chemical compounds catechins, theaflavins and thearubigins that work to control the damaging effects of free radicals in the body. Tea is particularly rich in polyphenols, but Dilmah has found a way to up its polyphenol content to maximum levels for tea that is both incredibly delicious and healthy.
To ensure every drinker gets the best out of each bottle of Dilmah tea, the company conducted market research on the total polyphenol content in comparison with four other leading bottled tea offerings in Singapore. Dilmah tea was found to contain up to three times more polyphenol compared to its competitors.
Dilmah Tea recorded 85.03mg of polyphenol per 100ml for its black tea and 125.13mg of polyphenol per 100ml of its green tea, compared to other green tea brands in the market which ranges from 48.01mg/100ml to 102.36mg/100ml.
Extraordinary Brews, Ethical Sources
From the bases of two teas – green or black – enjoy six refreshing flavours that promise pleasure with every sip. Naturally flavoured with fresh fruity and floral extracts, there is something for every tea drinker, whether they prefer it light and fresh or bold and full-bodied.
Green tea is elevated with flavours such as Lady Lavender, a blend of green tea accented with floral notes of the freshest lavender bouquet for a drink that is light and calming for evening relaxation, Rose & French Vanilla, a sensual blend of extraordinary roses with hints of vanilla for an enchanting flavour perfect for commemorating special moments and also Arabian Jasmine, an aromatic and stress-relieving pour with the delicate fragrance of jasmine blossoms that is perfect for any occasion. All three are made with Dilmah’s Ceylon Green Tea, ethically grown, handpicked as tea buds, and crafted at Dilmah’s state-of-the-art green tea factory in the central highlands of Sri Lanka. Unfermented during its manufacturing process, the tea takes on milder characteristics once brewed.
Black tea comes in flavours such as Lemon & Lime, a timeless blend of citrusy twists that burst with life for a definite pick-me-up on the hottest of days, White Peach that recalls bright summery days with fruity peaches that linger with a lasting impression. Last but not least, there’s Royal English, a signature black tea that is smooth yet full-bodied with light veils of honey for an unforgettable classic taste. This selection is made with Dilmah’s Unblended Black Tea – packed directly at source within days of harvesting to guarantee freshness and the finest quality in every bottle of Dilmah Ice Tea.
A successful recipient of Health Promotion Board’s Healthier Choice Symbol, the antioxidant-rich Dilmah Ice Tea is lower in sugar with the use of natural honey to enhance its taste, making it the perfect beverage to complement a meal or be enjoyed on its own.
Dilmah also endeavours to reduce the consumption of single-use plastics in its packaging by bottling its ice teas in glass instead of plastic.
“Consumers are looking for Craft and better-for-you products,” explained Moshy Cohen, CEO at BPI. “The Dilmah brand, with its heritage of quality and authenticity, brings a strong differentiation point into the ice tea category. We are very happy with this cooperation with Teabrary International in Singapore and are now positioned to launch in additional markets around the world.”
The Dilmah Single-Sourced Tea Story
Founder Merrill J. Fernando has long dedicated his life to tea, beginning in the 1950s when he witnessed the industry heading towards commoditisation. In the interest of tea drinkers and the crop that his country carefully produced, he made it his lifelong purpose to pursue a more sustainable approach to the cultivation and production of tea. It took him nearly four decades before he perfected and launched his own brand, Dilmah, in 1988.
Dilmah is the first producer-owned tea brand that offers tea handpicked and packed at origin (where it’s grown) to ensure great taste and natural goodness, making it one of the finest teas of the world. Also the world’s first ethically sourced tea, Dilmah believes strongly in giving back to the community and planet. This follows the Dilmah philosophy where business is a matter of human service.
CEO Dilhan C. Fernando says, “The promise our father gave consumers when offering the first genuinely ethical tea that was packed garden fresh at source, is what Dilmah continues to offer over three decades later. He has been steadfast in his commitment to keeping Dilmah a truly local product, which has not been easy. The pressure to adapt to changing circumstances and market conditions has been unrelenting: many tea brands today use Crush-Tear-Curl (CTC) tea and blend teas from other origins, which cost a fraction of Ceylon Tea, to offer tea that is more competitive in price but is less authentic, because they believed in the new reality. But Dilmah never compromises when it comes to quality.”
Hospitality
GAME ON: HOW GLOBAL SPORTS EVENTS RESHAPE CITIES, INVESTMENT & TOURISM
Saudi Arabia’s emergence as a global sporting destination is reshaping far more than its events calendar. As the Kingdom prepares to host a growing portfolio of international tournaments, from Formula 1 and international football to golf, boxing and e-sports, sport is increasingly recognised as a powerful driver of tourism demand, investment attraction and long-term destination positioning.
As David Thomson, Senior Vice President – Development, The First Group Hospitality, puts it: “Mega-events can put a city on the map. When managed well, they reposition a city in the minds of investors and travellers.”
Four leading hospitality executives share their perspectives ahead of the Future Hospitality Summit – FHS Saudi Arabia, taking place from 22-24 June at Mandarin Oriental Al Faisaliah, Riyadh.
Reputation before revenue
The leaders agreed that the reputational dividend far outweighs the short-term financial return. For Muin Serhan, CEO, Amsa Hospitality: “The greatest impact of global events lies in reputation. While revenue is temporary, reputation compounds over time. When executed well, a global event signals capability, safety, and cultural openness, factors closely watched by investors when they enter a market.”
Victor Abou Ghanem, CEO, Story Hospitality, frames the opportunity in similarly expansive terms: “For destinations, a mega-event is the most expensive advertising campaign you will ever run, and the only one the entire world covers for free. If you treat the event as a short-term P&L exercise, you probably won’t justify the cost. If you see it as a 10–20-year brand-building moment, the logic changes completely.”
Wael Al Sharif, Area General Manager, The Torch Hospitality, underlines the scale of the opportunity for Saudi Arabia specifically: “Brand-building dramatically outweighs immediate revenue. For Saudi Arabia preparing for Riyadh Expo 2030 and FIFA 2034, these platforms accelerate Vision 2030’s tourism diversification objectives by decades, creating irreversible perception shifts.”
Planning for the long game
The leaders agreed that engagement must begin well before the cameras turn on. As Wael Al Sharif puts it: “Engagement must begin at the master planning phase. Early collaboration with urban developers and event organisers ensures hospitality infrastructure aligns with legacy goals, avoiding siloed development and maximising post-event utility.”
Victor Abou Ghanem is direct about the consequences of arriving late: “By the time logos are unveiled and tickets go on sale, many of the big decisions – venue locations, infrastructure routes, and zoning – are already locked in. For hotel and real-estate players, the ideal is to be at the table when masterplans are drawn, and transport lines are being discussed.”
Building smart, staying relevant
On supply and long-term value, the leaders were united: build for the normal year, not the peak. David Thomson frames it simply: “Capacity decisions need to be based on long-term commercial viability, not short-term demand peaks. Good design, flexible use of space, and selecting the right locations are essential for built assets to remain relevant well after the event concludes.” Muin Serhan reinforces the point: “Operators should prioritise conversion-ready assets, mixed-use developments, and properties adaptable to evolving demand patterns after the event.” Victor Abou Ghanem shares his rule of thumb: “Owners should treat the event as a bonus, not the baseline.”
The commercial prize, the leaders agreed, lies beyond the RevPAR spike. “Short-term rate premiums are welcome, but they are not the main prize,” says Muin Serhan. “If the experience converts first-time visitors into repeat guests, the commercial impact continues long after the event.” Wael Al Sharif points to Saudi Arabia’s own mega-projects as evidence of where the broader value lands: “In KSA, projects like Qiddiya and Diriyah demonstrate [the mixed-use value] perfectly.”
Legacy over hype
The answer, the leaders agreed, comes down to one word: legacy. For Victor Abou Ghanem, “cities that win in the long run design the event as one chapter in a larger urban story. They invest in transport that locals actually use, venues that can be downsized or repurposed, and tourism strategies that run for decades.” David Thomson applies a commercial lens: “Cities that think beyond the event itself align supply with realistic post-event demand and phase development responsibly. When expansion merely aims to satisfy short-term hype, oversupply and margin pressure usually follow.” Muin Serhan adds that the human dimension matters as much as the physical: “Consistency is what ultimately turns first-time visitors into loyal guests.”
Turning two weeks into two decades
The executives were asked to distil the opportunity into a single sentence.
Muin Serhan: “Align infrastructure, hospitality supply, and place-making with a long-term economic strategy so that the global attention generated over two weeks becomes the foundation for two decades of tourism growth.”
Victor Abou Ghanem: “You turn a two-week event into a 20-year opportunity by treating it not as a party, but as a starting point for re-imagining how people live, move, stay and invest in your city long after the final whistle.”
David Thomson: “Turning a two-week event into a 20-year opportunity requires developing hotels, retail, entertainment, and other assets that will continue attracting visitors long after the final game.”
Wael Al Sharif: “By treating mega-events as transformation accelerators rather than standalone spectacles — embedding infrastructure into permanent mixed-use ecosystems, leveraging global attention for perception repositioning, and designing for adaptable post-event utility — destinations convert temporary gatherings into enduring competitive advantages that compound across decades.”
Hospitality
ZAHRA’S KITCHEN SHARES ITS GUIDE TO EASIER SUMMER EATING IN THE UAE
As summer routines shift across the UAE, Zahra’s Kitchen, the UAE homegrown premium food brand, is encouraging consumers to rethink convenience food with simple, flexible meal ideas designed to make everyday eating easier, more flavourful and less time consuming. The seasonal guide comes as the brand expands its ready meal range with three new additions and prepares to launch a limited edition single-portion collection exclusively on Noon Minutes this summer.
Created for busy everyday routines, Zahra’s Kitchen offers handcrafted ready meals, snacks and nibbles inspired by comforting recipes and familiar flavours. Made using responsibly sourced ingredients, with no artificial additives or preservatives, products are frozen at peak freshness to help preserve flavour, texture and nutritional value, while offering greater ease, flexibility and variety throughout the week.


This summer, the brand is spotlighting one of the simplest ways to approach mealtimes at home. One ready meal does not need to mean one meal. Instead, Zahra’s Kitchen is sharing how its dishes can become the starting point for multiple meal ideas, helping consumers create more variety with less effort.
Simple ways to rethink summer meals include:
- Beef Bolognese: Serve with pasta for an easy dinner, or turn it into lasagne, pasta bakes, stuffed vegetables or eggplant fattah.
- Chilli Con Carne: Use as a base for tacos, enchiladas, nachos, rice bowls or loaded baked potatoes.
- Butter Chicken: Pair with rice and naan, or fold into wraps, flatbreads, sandwiches and pizzas for a quick lunch or casual dinner.
- Plant-Based Sweet Potato and Chickpea Red Curry: Enjoy on its own, or serve alongside grilled fish, chicken or vegetables for an easy summer meal.
The expanded ready meal range now includes Lentil Soup, Chicken Freekah and Plant-Based Sweet Potato and Chickpea Red Curry, joining customer favourites including Beef Bolognese, Butter Chicken, Beef Meatballs, Chilli Con Carne and Basmati Rice.
Currently available in two-serving portions, the ready meal range has been designed to offer flexibility, value and multiple meal occasions. The upcoming limited edition single-portion range, launching exclusively on Noon Minutes this summer, has been developed for consumers looking for greater flexibility during busier days.
Alongside its ready meal collection, Zahra’s Kitchen also offers a range of snacks and nibbles rooted in Middle Eastern flavours and entertaining traditions, including Musakhan Rolls, Beef Kibbeh, Falafel and Spinach Puff Bites. Ideal for sharing platters, lunchboxes, family gatherings, casual hosting or everyday snacking, the range reflects the same commitment to quality ingredients and ease.
Hospitality
KINTSUGI KAHANI WORKSHOP WITH ROHINI DUBAI
On 27 June, Rohini will host the Kintsugi Kahani Experience, inspired by the Japanese art of golden repair. Rooted in the philosophy of embracing imperfection, the experience invites guests to explore creativity through a hands-on workshop that celebrates the beauty found in flaws and life’s imperfections.
Throughout the evening, participants will create a meaningful keepsake to take home while engaging with the centuries-old concept of transforming brokenness into something beautiful and unique. Designed as a reflective and creative experience, the workshop offers guests an opportunity to connect with the art form in an intimate and inspiring setting.
Follow and explore: rohinidubai.com and IG: @rohini.dubai for more such offers and experiences..
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